CV-19 Grantmaking strategic planning analytics
Delaware Valley Region
An atlas of COVID-19 era need and philanthropic response.
June, 2020.
This report provides strategic planning intelligence to philanthropies making placed-based investments in the wake of COVID-19. The goal is to understand where the supply of resources are aligned with the demand for those resources, and where they are not. Philanthropies can then use this intelligence to plan future investments.
This report is part of a larger effort to chronicle philanthropic efforts to battle COVID-19 in the Delaware Valley region.
In between 2020-03-23 and 2020-05-15, organizations in the region applied for 3330 grants, receiving 847 (25%). These grants totalled $1,278,011.
The organizational mission that saw the most funding in the region, was Human Services, which received $340,877. 55% of regional Census tracts applied for funding and 27% received grants.
The next section provides additional grantmaking analytics. Section 2 visualizes a series of strategic planning overlay maps intended to help philanthropies working in the region identify areas where need currently outweighs grant resources. The remaining sections include additional analytics. Worth noting is the Employment section, which visualizes the geography of COVID-19-related unemployment.
The goal of these map overlays is to help stakeholders understand if resources are being allocated where they are needed most. Philanthropies should consider targeting future investment in places where need exceeds grantmaking.
Housing instability and social vulnerability indices define the geography of need in the Delaware Valley region. Housing instability is a composite that describes the number of renters, the number of renters paying more than 30% of their income on rent (ie. ‘rent burdened’) and the current tract-level unemployment rate1.
Social vulnerability is a composite of rent burdened households, those that are single-parent, tract-level poverty rate, percent receiving SNAP benefits and percent without health insurance. Below, need and grantaking are visualized side-by-side and with cartographic overlays. Again, these overlays highlight areas where more investment may be needed.
These are relative measures for the region only, which received $1,278,011 across 847 grants. In addition, grants have been georeferenced to the location of the grantee. This location may not reflect the grantee’s service area.
Census tracts with lighter yellow, are those where relative housing instability is greater than relative grantmaking. Green tracts are those where housing instability and grantmaking are properly aligned. Tracts with darker shades of blue are those where there is more relative grantmaking than relative instability.
With respect to housing in the Delaware Valley region, the average tract-level median rent is $1,052.17. The average rate of owner occupied housing is 66%. In 45% of tracts, at least half of households are rent burdened.
The maps below provide a detailed look at housing in the region.
Rent burdened households are those spending more than 30% of their income on housing. The map below visualizes percent rent burdened by tract.
The map below visualizes the percent of renters with no vehicle.
The map below visualizes the distance in miles from each tract to its nearest transit station.
In the Delaware Valley region, the average median household income is $73,562.33 and the average population density is 8,007 people per square mile. The mean poverty rate is 14%, with the highest poverty rate, area wide, being 82%.
Below a host of demographic-related maps are presented.
The map below visualizes the distance in miles from each tract to its nearest house of worship.
In this section, labor force participation is visualized along with recent changes that have resulted from COVID-19.
The average rate of individuals who have attained at least a high school degree in the region is 89%. In 2015, the Census estimated that 2,690,347 individuals were employed, which represents 77% of adults. As of mid May, 2020, the estimated average tract-level unemployment rate was 7% meaning an estimated 184,066 fewer individuals were employed at that time.
Below the geography of COVID-19 unemployment is explored further.
Using Census LODES data, the below set of maps show where regional workers in select sectors live.
Combining tract-level employment counts from Census LODES with tract-level unemployment estimates from the BLS, allows estimates for where employment-vulnerable workers live in the region.
Moving on to food insecurity in the Delaware Valley region, the average rate of households receiving food assistance is 14%. The average rate of households with children receiving food assistance area wide is 6%.
Below, food insecurity and food access in the region is mapped.
The map below visualizes the rate of low income households who live more than 1/2 mile from a supermarket in urban areas and more than 10 miles in rural areas.
In this section, child welfare indicators are presented.
The map below maps the distance in miles from each tract to its nearest childcare center.
The average health insured rate for households in the Delaware Valley region is 98%. The average rate of disabled residents is 13%.
Several health-related indicators are mapped below.
The map below maps the distance in miles from each Census tract to its nearest emergency care facility.
The map below measures distance in miles from each Census tract to its nearest urgent care facility.
This work was supported by a coalition philanthropic organizations in the Delaware Valley region and created by the below entities.
2.3 Social vulnerability & grantmaking maps